In Re Appropriation of Easement for Highway Purposes Over Property of Smith

195 N.E.2d 364, 118 Ohio App. 435, 25 Ohio Op. 2d 349, 1963 Ohio App. LEXIS 810
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 24, 1963
Docket2725
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 195 N.E.2d 364 (In Re Appropriation of Easement for Highway Purposes Over Property of Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Appropriation of Easement for Highway Purposes Over Property of Smith, 195 N.E.2d 364, 118 Ohio App. 435, 25 Ohio Op. 2d 349, 1963 Ohio App. LEXIS 810 (Ohio Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

*436 Crawford, J.

Appellant, Ida V. Smith, owner of real property, appeals from an order of the Common Pleas Court overruling her motion for distribution to her of the entire amount of $11,000 remaining in the deposit by the Director of Highways, and agreed upon as the value of property taken for highway purposes.

Appellant has been the lessee under a purported 99-year lease, renewable forever, of certain canal lands which are required for use by the Director of Highways.

The state of Ohio, as owner of the fee, claims through the Attorney General that the Department of Public Works is entitled to a portion of the fund. The Common Pleas Court held that the fund represents the value of the fee simple and that, therefore, the appellant, as lessee, was entitled only to a portion thereof. Our first inquiry is to determine whether this premise is correct.

The Director of Highways proceeded under and in accordance with the provisions of Section 5519.01, Revised Code. He first filed his resolution and finding, which recites that he has been unable to purchase certain property, thereinafter described, which it is necessary to appropriate and take immediate possession of for the public convenience and welfare. Listed as owners were Ida V. Smith, appellant, the Department of Public Works of the state of Ohio, and the Treasurer of Montgomery County, Ohio.

The property over which the Director of Highways seeks a perpetual easement for limited access highway purposes is set forth in two tracts. The first, is .054 acres heretofore conveyed to Ida Y. Smith by deed, of which she is the owner in fee simple.

The second tract is designated, “Also Canal Lease No. 243.” Then follows a legal description of 2.75 acres of land. Next appears this language: “Being that portion of said Miami and Erie Canal Lands leased to said Ida V. Smith, et ah, by Lease No. 243, on file in the Department of Public Works, Columbus, Ohio, * * *”

This is followed by the finding of the director in these words: ‘ ‘ And I find the following amount to be the value of the property to be appropriated and damages to the residue:

*437 Damages To Total

“Value of Land Value of Structure The Besidue Deposit

$11,000 $12,180 $0.00 $23,180”

Nothing whatever was filed in the case by the Director of Public Works. Ida V. Smith alone filed notice and petition of appeal and furnished bond.

After the preliminary procedures, a mimeographed settlement entry was filed, which begins:

“It appears to the court that the appellants [sic], Ida V. Smith and the Department of Public Works of the state of Ohio, over which an easement was appropriated in this cause, have agreed with the Director of Highways upon the amount of compensation and damages due said appellants [sic] by reason of said appropriation, to accept and withdraw the sum of twenty three thousand one hundred and eighty dollars ($23,180) heretofore deposited by the Director of Highways, in full payment thereof, and said appellants [sic], Ida V. Smith and Department of Public Works of state of Ohio, do hereby release all claims for further compensation and/or damages * * * and said deposit of twenty three thousand one hundred eighty dollars ($23,180) shall be paid upon application of said appellants [sic] in an order for distribution.”

Upon application and leave of court, appellant withdrew the sum of $12,180, representing the sum fixed as the value of the structure, leaving the balance of $11,000 still to be distributed.

The appellant contends that the state is attempting to sue itself in this case, although lacking authority to do so; that the state is attempting to cast itself in two roles, as both landlord and tenant; that by terminating the lease of appellant, the state, as owner in fee simple, has acquired the interest of its lessee; that the tenancy is thereby extinguished and a merger has resulted, so that the state can claim no further rents and no further rights in the lease; and that it has purchased the lease of appellant and entered into possession, and cannot now claim any part of the purchase price it has paid, or ask for further rents.

Appellant points out that at one time the Department of *438 Highways and Public Works was one single department, and, as such, executed the lease to appellant on November 18, 1926; that such department was created in the 84th General Assembly (1921-1923), by House Bill 249 (109 Ohio Laws, 105), and was to be administered by the Superintendent of Public Works with authority to lease canal lands. (109 Ohio Laws, 106.)

Appellant says that in 1927 the Legislature, by enacting House Bill 67, divided this combined department which had executed the lease, into a Department of Public Works and a Department of Highways. She contends that the state cannot by this shuffling of departments change her rights or status as a lessee of the state.

The Attorney General claims that the state is not suing itself because there is no adversary proceeding between the two departments; that the Department of Public Works is merely represented here in order that it may participate in the deposit made by the Department of Highways; that the settlement entry constitutes an agreement that the value of the fee simple title is $11,000; that the Department of Highways followed the correct procedure in depositing the full market value of the fee simple title to the 2.75 acre tract of canal lands; and that the right of one department of the state to be compensated for lands taken by another department is provided in Section 115.45, Revised Code; that it is the usual and proper course in appropriation cases to determine the value of the fee simple and then, upon distribution, ascertain the respective rights of the owners; that the reorganization of the various state departments makes no essential difference in the present question; that the state owned this property in its proprietary and not in its governmental capacity; that, therefore, the Department of Public Works is entitled to participate in the distribution of the deposit; and that the leasehold estate cannot be converted into a higher estate because of the appropriation.

The Attorney General’s brief has summarized his position in these words:

“If the agreed appraisal figure represented only the value of the leasehold interest then there would be merit in the appellant’s claim to the entire amount. But such is not the case because the agreed appraisal figure represents the value of the entire fee simple title. The appraisal figure must either be *439 redetermined in order to reflect the appraisal value of the leasehold interest only, or if not, then the Department of Public Works should be allowed to participate in the award to the extent of its interest as lessor.”

The second sentence states the premise upon which the Court of Common Pleas acted. We proceed, therefore, to examine its validity — to determine, in other words, whether the sum of $11,000 includes the value of the fee simple title to the 2.75 acres of canal lands, or only the value of appellant’s leasehold estate therein.

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Bluebook (online)
195 N.E.2d 364, 118 Ohio App. 435, 25 Ohio Op. 2d 349, 1963 Ohio App. LEXIS 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-appropriation-of-easement-for-highway-purposes-over-property-of-smith-ohioctapp-1963.